A nasal brush test can rapidly and accurately diagnose Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), an incurable and ultimately fatal neurodegenerative disorder, according to a study by National Institutes of Health scientists and their Italian colleagues.

Up to now, a definitive CJD diagnosis requires testing brain tissue obtained after death or by biopsy in living patients. The study describing the less invasive nasal test appears in the Aug. 7 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

CJD is a prion disease. These diseases originate when, for reasons not fully understood, normally harmless prion protein molecules become abnormal and gather in clusters. Prion diseases affect animals and people. Human prion diseases include variant, familial and sporadic CJD. The most common form, sporadic CJD, affects an estimated 1 in one million people annually worldwide. Other prion diseases include scrapie in sheep; chronic wasting disease in deer, elk and moose; and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease, in cattle. Scientists have associated the accumulation of these clusters with tissue damage that leaves sponge-like holes in the brain.

“This exciting advance, the culmination of decades of studies on prion diseases, markedly improves on available diagnostic tests for CJD that are less reliable, more difficult for patients to tolerate, and require more time to obtain results,” said Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a component of NIH. “With additional validation, this test has potential for use in clinical and agricultural settings.”

An easy-to-use diagnostic test would let doctors clearly differentiate prion diseases from other brain diseases, according to Byron Caughey, Ph.D., the lead NIAID scientist involved in the study. Although specific CJD treatments are not available, prospects for their development and effectiveness could be enhanced by early and accurate diagnoses. Further, a test that identifies people with various forms of prion diseases could help to prevent the spread of prion diseases among and between species. For instance, it is known that human prion diseases can be transmitted via medical procedures such as blood transfusions, transplants and the contamination of surgical instruments. People also have contracted variant CJD after exposure to BSE-infected cattle.

September 25, 2017 - When the study was released this summer, Stephanie Czub, a prion researcher with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, said: "The assumption was for the longest time that chronic wasting disease was not a threat to human health, But with the new data, ...

September 24, 2017 - However, the Center for Disease Control reports that specific studies have begun that focus on identifying human prion disease in a population that is at increased risk for exposure to potentially CWD-infected deer or elk meat . . . many years of ...

September 23, 2017 - When the study was released this summer, Stephanie Czub, a prion researcher with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, said: “The assumption was for the longest time that chronic wasting disease was not a threat to human health, but with the new data, ...

September 20, 2017 - When the study was released this summer, Stephanie Czub, a prion researcher with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, said: “The assumption was for the longest time that chronic wasting disease was not a threat to human health, But with the new data, ...

September 20, 2017 - Justin Binfet, regional wildlife coordinator for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department's Casper office, pulls a tooth from an elk taken by a hunter to determine its age after removing a lymph node to test for chronic wasting disease. Early results from ...

September 19, 2017 - Perhaps the best-known prion disease is mad cow disease, which destroys the brains and spinal cords of infected cattle. But there are other infectious forms: scrapie in sheep, kuru and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans. There are several genetic ...

September 16, 2017 - However, if the past few years are any indication, the news will likely carry plenty of scary stories about Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD), a deer ailment that has been detected in 24 states, including Utah. As a wildlife disease specialist with ... The ...

September 12, 2017 - “While extensive disease surveillance in Canada and elsewhere has not provided any direct evidence that CWD has infected humans, the potential for CWD to be transmitted to humans cannot be excluded,” Health Canada said. “In exercising precaution ...